Yeats' FAIRY AND FOLK
TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
THE POOKA
The Pooka, rectè Púca, seems essentially an animal spirit. Some derive
his name from poc, a he-goat; and speculative persons consider him the
forefather of Shakespeare's "Puck". On solitary mountains and among old ruins he
lives, "grown monstrous with much solitude," and is of the race of the
nightmare. "In the MS. story, called 'Mac-na-Michomhairle', of uncertain
authorship," writes me Mr. Douglas Hyde, "we read that 'out of a certain hill in
Leinster, there used to emerge as far as his middle, a plump, sleek, terrible
steed, and speak in human voice to each person about November-day, and he was
accustomed to give intelligent and proper answers to such as consulted him
concerning all that would befall them until the November of next year. And the
people used to leave gifts and presents at the hill until the coming of Patrick
and the holy clergy.' This tradition appears to be a cognate one with that of
the Púca." Yes! unless it were merely an augh-ishka [each-uisgÃ],
or Water-horse. For these, we are told, were common once, and used to come out
of the water to gallop on the sands and in the fields, and people would often go
between them and the marge and bridle them, and they would make the finest of
horses if only you could keep them away from the sight of the water; but if once
they saw a glimpse of the water, they would plunge in with their rider, and tear
him to pieces at the bottom. It being a November spirit, however, tells in
favour of the Pooka, for November-day is sacred to the Pooka. It is hard to
realise that wild, staring phantom grown sleek and civil.
He has many shapes--is now a horse, now an ass, now a bull, now a goat, now
an eagle. Like all spirits, he is only half in the world of form.
  
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![Aran Islanders, J. Synge [1898] (public domain photograph)](irishwmn.jpg) |